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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 20th, 2023

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  • There are a lot of analogies but they all fail in some way. I think PBS Spacetime does the best in general, with good graphics to back up the words.

    My layman’s explanation is probably all stuff you’ve heard before. Massive objects “warp” spacetime and things that get stuck in those “wells” eventually fall to the bottom due to drag (from a variety of sources).

    You’ve also probably seen the rubber sheet with a bowling ball in the middle used to represent that warping. To visualize that in 3D, I like to imagine a 3D grid of nodes and edges (like a jungle gym of joints and bars) where the whole thing is flexed inward towards a center point. More warped near the center, less warped further out. That kind of conveys the acceleration from gravity felt by things around that center mass.


  • Thank you for calling this aspect out. I’m surprised so many people are overlooking it. I protest YouTube for the same reasons, but I’ve got one more to add.

    When they merged Google Music into YouTube, the service became worse. I’d often have music streaming throughout the day over my speakers, but that broke after the merge.

    Anytime I watched a video on my phone that had Content ID-recognized music in it (even in the background), they would cut the stream to my speakers because I am only allowed one stream with any music in it at all.

    This isn’t the behavior when you use the ad supported service. Only the paid.

    Not to mention all the proper features of Google Music that didn’t carry forward.


  • Byter@lemmy.onetoTechnology@lemmy.worldGoogle Fiber goes big with 20-gig plan
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    9 months ago

    If you’re struggling to think of a use-case, consider the internet-based services that are commonplace now that weren’t created until infrastructure advanced to the point they were possible, if not “obvious” in retrospect.

    • multimedia websites
    • real-time gaming
    • buffered audio – and later video – streaming
    • real-time video calling (now even wirelessly, like Star Trek!)
    • nearly every office worker suddenly working remotely at the same time

    My personal hope is that abundant, bidirectional bandwidth and IPv6 adoption, along with cheap SBC appliances and free software like Nextcloud, will usher in an era where the average Joe can feel comfortable self-hosting their family’s digital content, knowing they can access it from anywhere in the world and that it’s safely backed up at each member’s home server.


  • I’m also a UBI layperson, but this is my understanding:

    Basic incomes don’t need to match or exceed the cost of living to provide some of their purported benefits. One of those benefits is replacing difficult to administer welfare services (of which there are some discussions in this thread). In that way the $2700 per person per year can be more efficiently allocated (towards an ideal national gross prosperity) by the individual.

    This might solve issues like the infamous “welfare cliff” that have arisen from difficulties in administration.








  • Not the parent poster, but I am similarly concerned about tag spam. I find big tag blocks can ruin the reading experience on platforms that display them in-line with the body text.

    Another comment suggested that tags be put in a field separate from the body of the post (and they shouldn’t be parsed from the body, either). I think that’s the best way to facilitate Lemmy clients to (optionally) hide big tag blocks.




  • Byter@lemmy.onetoPrivacy@lemmy.mlWhich search engine should I use?
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    11 months ago

    They ask a bit of trust on that, but their FAQ also has an appeal to reason:

    I have privacy concerns over linking my search queries with my credit card. Why should I trust you?

    We do not log search queries. Queries you type are never associated with your account. The simple reason is we don’t have any reason to do so, as it would only be a liability for us. We are in the business of selling search results, not user data.

    (For the record, I use Kagi)


  • Byter@lemmy.onetoAndroid@lemmy.worldPer app/URL VPN settings
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    11 months ago

    You might consider a more elegant approach to accomplish your goals.

    For example, I run Tailscale on all of my devices. They are accessible to each other (at all times) through the encrypted “Tailnet” while each has its own public internet provider (my home ISP, my cellular provider, my VPS host, etc).

    They all route their DNS requests through my home server which is running Adguard (for DNS ad blocking on every device). If I wanted I could route all their traffic (not just DNS) through the home server, and I could have the home server’s internet-facing interface connect through a commercial VPN to then hide all that egress traffic, across all my devices.


  • Byter@lemmy.onetoTechnology@lemmy.worldComing to you soon...
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    11 months ago

    YouTube is in an advantaged position relative to other sites because they directly serve the ads from the same servers that serve the content. That’s why DNS blocking doesn’t work.

    It would take more effort than they currently put in but they could track each user-session closely enough to require that the ad stream complete before the content stream is served.

    If that happens, I think the next step in ad blocking would be to accept the ad stream but hide it from the user. Let it play silently in the background if necessary.

    That’d mean accepting the extra data transfer but still avoiding the psychic damage.